Creeland

Creeland

by Dallas Hunt

Description:

Publisher's Description (Nightwood Editions)
Creeland is a poetry collection concerned with notions of home and the quotidian attachments we feel to those notions, even across great distances. Even in an area such as Treaty Eight (northern Alberta), a geography decimated by resource extraction and development, people are creating, living, laughing, surviving and flourishing—or at least attempting to. 

The poems in this collection are preoccupied with the role of Indigenous aesthetics in the creation and nurturing of complex Indigenous lifeworlds. They aim to honour the encounters that everyday Cree economies enable, and the words that try—and ultimately fail—to articulate them. Hunt gestures to the movements, speech acts and relations that exceed available vocabularies, that may be housed within words like joy, but which the words themselves cannot fully convey. This debut collection is vital in the context of a colonial aesthetic designed to perpetually foreclose on Indigenous futures and erase Indigenous existence. 

the Cree word for constellation
is a saskatoon berry bush in summertime
the translation for policeman 
in Cree is mîci nisôkan, kohkôs 
the translation for genius 
in Cree is my kôhkom muttering in her sleep 
the Cree word for poetry is your four-year-old 
niece’s cracked lips spilling out 
broken syllables of nêhiyawêwin in between 
the gaps in her teeth 

Author's Biography (Nightwood Editions)
Dallas Hunt is Cree and a member of Wapsewsipi (Swan River First Nation) in Treaty Eight territory in northern Alberta. He has had creative works published in Prairie Fire, PRISM international and Arc Poetry. His first children’s book, Awâsis and the World-famous Bannock, was published through Highwater Press in 2018, and was nominated for several awards. His first poetry collection, Creeland, published in 2022, was nominated for the George Ryga Award for Social Awareness in Literature, Gerald Lampert Memorial Award and the Indigenous Voices Award. Hunt lives in Vancouver, BC.
 

Resource type: Book (Fiction/Poetry)

Age recommendation: Grade 10-12, Post secondary

Keywords: Treaty Eight, home, poetry collection, attachment, connection, bonds, survive, surviving, flourish, flourishing, kohkom, nature, grandmother, ancestors, Cree, sisters, mothers, aunts, matriarchial, matriarch, woman, women, white, dance, colonize, colonialism, racism, body, skin, police, authority, brutality, reflection, langauge, words, writing, space, healing, death

Year of publication: 2022

Publisher information: Nightwood Editions